The New York Mets made the biggest splash of this MLB offseason when they signed Juan Soto. Along with that, they have added three key pieces to their starting
The New York Mets have already spent $765 million to sign Juan Soto this winter. Could they mortgage the farm system to trade for Vladimir Guerrero Jr. too?
What will the New York Mets' encore be after their Juan Soto caper? It was nearly a month ago at this point, but Soto going to the Mets is still the top story of the Major League Baseball offseason. The 26-year-old superstar signed a record-smashing $765 million contract,
One of the MLB analysts have got it on face for his open narrative on the New York Yankees being better off without Juan Soto.
In an 11-photo Instagram post on Dec. 31 captioned “2024>2025,” Judge highlighted his year but did not include a single post with Soto, who helped form the most powerful lineup duo in baseball, Soto batting No. 2 and Judge third. (Soto did like the post, however.)
The New York Mets secured one of baseball's biggest and brightest superstars when they signed Juan Soto to a 15-year, $765 million deal earlier this month. How
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The New York Mets are on the verge of solidifying their rotation with one of the five best remaining free agents.
After a very impressive 2024 season, superstar outfielder Juan Soto decided to jump ship and sign with the cross-town rival New York Mets. Soto landed a historic deal and should help take the Mets to another level for years to come.
If they could add some more pop to the lineup, it wouldn't hurt. Former Mets star Pete Alonso still is out there and is projected to land a six-year, $174 million deal by Spotrac. It's unclear if the contract will end up reaching that number, but the Mets certainly could afford it.
The New York Yankees were predicted to lose Roki Sasaki to the New York Mets after the Mets already stole Juan Soto.